Every time it seems Phil Kessel and Joffrey Lupul are losing steam, they get back to being coal-stokers and goalscorers.

So no one in the engine room was fretting much on Thursday when the numbers were tallied, Kessel with two goals and one assist the past 10 games, Lupul one goal and four helpers. You don’t hang out with the NHL’s top 10 scorers all season by staying in those funks very long.

“We thought our line played really well in Pittsburgh,” said Tyler Bozak, the centre for the duo. “We could have had four or five goals and we had one called back. It’s nothing to worry about, we’re still getting our chances. It’s only a matter of time.”

But defenceman Luke Schenn said the whole Leaf line can expect an already tight-checking reception to be squeezed harder in the final 31 games.

“You saw it the past two games against the Malkin line,” Schenn said. “(An extended slump) hasn’t happened to them all year and even if it does, other teams will have matched them with their top lines and defence pairings.”

The Leafs have 156 goals, with Lupul and Kessel ganging up for 103 points.

“It has been going Phil’s way a lot this year,” Bozak said of his close friend’s chase of milestones such as 40 goals. “There will be slumps now and again, but I think both have been playing great.”

Saturday’s game in Ottawa would be the perfect time for them to get hot again — and a chance for the Leafs to catch Ottawa with a regulation win, depending on Friday night’s out-of-town scoreboard. But Ottawa has frustrated the Leafs snipers this season.

Kessel, Lupul and defenceman Dion Phaneuf were all excused from an off-ice workout on Thursday because they’d been at last weekend’s all-star game. The Leafs play eight times in 15 nights starting Saturday, so a day away from the ice was prescribed.